Paul Stephenson
In its scrutiny role the European Parliament (EP) makes wide use of severalinformational resources, including Commission evaluations and EuropeanCourt of Auditors’ performance audits. These crucial inputs into deliberativeprocesses of parliamentary oversight enable committees to monitor theperformance of policies financed by the EU budget. Effective scrutiny isfundamental for the throughput legitimacy and financial accountability of EUpolicy and law making. Traditionally the EP’s Budgetary Control Committee(CONT) has scrutinised ECA reports across all policy domains. However, duringthe eighth and ninth legislatures (2014-2024), direct contact has been forgedbetween the standing committees and ECA for the presentation of auditfindings, allowing committees a more retrospective perspective on policyperformance. Arguably, greater engagement and understanding of budgetarycontrol helps the EP as co-legislator deliver improved regulation and betterdesigned policy instruments. This article explores the evolving nature of EP-ECA committee relations and institutionalisation of new scrutiny arrangements.